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#1 Arpa

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Posted 28 June 2010 - 10:07 AM

ՇՈՒՆՇԱՆՈՐԴԻ!!!
ՇԱՆ ՍԱՏԱԿ
I have been waiting for this day to see that "turkordi" to hit the dust. Was he a senator from Washington or from istambokh? Speaking of "crocodile tears", what good did he do for America except his repetition of his days as a Ku Klux Klan?
Which dog faced is he?
Does the KKK recognize the Armenains as an "aryan" nation?
http://adpereira.fil...u-klux-klan.jpg
Now he can go to the mountains of WV and hunt turkeys, or go to the mountains of turkey and shoot Armenians.
We read that Senator Byrd has died. May he NOT RIP
His surname rhymes with “bird” like that ugly bird that we slaughter every November.
Simply because his whore daughter in law is of heritage of that “bird”, that he is a “turkey” (gobble gobble) from the mountains of WV, he single handedly filibustered (bastard) Sen. Bob Dole’s argument at the Senate. Not to forget that a former member of the KKK, and that hypocrite cried, shed crocodile tears at the news of Sen. Ted Kennedy’s illness. Sen. Kennedy was a friend of the Armenians. How could he, with clear conscience connect to Sen. Kennedy?
http://www.hurriyetd...t-92-2010-06-28
http://entertainment...027968734AhIYVc
Շունշաորդի թուրքորդի

Turkey's 'best friend' in US Senate dead at 92
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Monday, June 28, 2010
WASHINGTON - Daily News with wires
Vocal Turkey supporter Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia, the longest-serving member of the U.S. Congress, died at the age of 92 after almost six decades in office, U.S. television reported early Monday.
The reports quoted Byrd’s spokesman as saying the senator had died peacefully at approximately 3 a.m. at Inova Fairfax Hospital. No specific cause of death was revealed.
The senator, a Democrat, was admitted to a Washington-area hospital late last week and doctors had described his condition as “seriously ill,” his office said Sunday.
Byrd went to the hospital suffering from what was believed to be heat exhaustion and severe dehydration as a result of the extreme temperatures in Washington, where it reached 37 degrees Celsius over the weekend, his aides said.
Sen. Jay Rockefeller, a fellow West Virginian in the Senate, said it was his “greatest privilege” to serve with Byrd. “I looked up to him, I fought next to him and I am deeply saddened that he is gone,” Rockefeller said.
Armenia filibuster
Byrd had served in Congress since Jan. 3, 1953. In November, he broke the record for congressional service that had been established by Democrat Carl Hayden of Arizona, who served in the House and Senate from 1912 to 1969.
During his long career, Byrd threw his full support behind foreign issues regarding Turkey, leading a successful three-day filibuster in 1990 against a resolution brought by Sen. Bob Dole to recognize Armenian genocide claims.
A filibuster refers to any delaying or obstructive tactics used to prevent a measure from being brought to a vote. The most common form of filibuster occurs when a senator attempts to delay or entirely prevent a vote on a bill by extending the debate on the measure, but other dilatory tactics exist.
The rules permit a senator, or a series of senators, to speak for as long as they wish and on any topic they choose, unless “three-fifths of the senators duly chosen and sworn” (usually 60 out of 100 senators) brings debate to a close by invoking cloture.
The Senate refused by a 49-49 vote to break Byrd’s filibuster against Sen. Dole's resolution.
An enthusiastic supporter of U.S. President Barack Obama’s 2008 White House bid, Byrd had expressed regret for his past membership in the Ku Klux Klan and his participation in the 83-day filibuster to delay the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which outlawed racial segregation. He later apologized for both actions, saying intolerance has no place in America.
Serving first in the House of Representatives and then in the Senate, Byrd is the only person ever elected to nine full Senate terms.
In comportment and style, he often seemed a throwback to the courtly 19th century. He could recite poetry, quote the Bible, discuss the Constitutional Convention and detail the Peloponnesian Wars – and frequently did in Senate debates. Yet there was nothing courtly about his exercise of power.
“Bob is a living encyclopedia, and legislative graveyards are filled with the bones of those who underestimated him,”former House Speaker Jim Wright, a Democrat from Texas, once said in remarks Byrd later displayed in his office.
Democrats’ No. 2
In 1971, Byrd ousted Sen. Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts as the Democrats’ second in command. He was elected majority leader in 1976 and held the post until his party lost control of the Senate four years later. He remained his party’s leader through six years in the minority and then spent another two years as majority leader.
Byrd stepped aside as majority leader in 1989 when Democrats sought a more contemporary spokesman. His consolation prize was the chairmanship of the Appropriations Committee, with control over almost limitless federal spending.
Within two years, he surpassed his five-year goal of making sure more than $1 billion in federal funds was sent back to West Virginia, money used to build highways, bridges, buildings and other facilities, some named after him.
In 2006 vote, Byrd won an unprecedented ninth term in the Senate with 64 percent of the vote, just months after surpassing South Carolinian Strom Thurmond’s record as the congressional body’s longest-serving member.
But Byrd also seemed to slow after the death of Erma, his wife of almost 69 years, in 2006. Frail and wistful, he used two canes to walk and experienced several health scares in recent years, including an extended hospitalization last year that prompted speculation of his looming retirement, which never materialized.
By 2009, aides were bringing him to and from the Senate floor in a wheelchair. In November, he surrendered his chairmanship of the Appropriations Committee.
Byrd’s lodestar was protecting the Constitution; he frequently pulled out a dog-eared copy of it. Unlike other prominent Senate Democrats who voted to authorize the war in Iraq, Byrd stood firm in opposition. “The people are becoming more and more aware that we were hoodwinked, that the leaders of this country misrepresented or exaggerated the necessity for invading Iraq,” he said.
Byrd was an early supporter of the Vietnam War, and his 14-hour, 13-minute filibuster against the 1964 Civil Rights Act remains one of the longest ever. His views gradually moderated, particularly on economic issues. His love of Senate traditions inspired him to write a four-volume history of the chamber.


Edited by Arpa, 28 June 2010 - 04:19 PM.


#2 Arpa

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Posted 15 July 2010 - 10:37 AM

To continue on the theme of... the latest garbage talk around town.
SHUNSHANORDINER!!!

How many churches are there in Mecca?
May they all sit on these minarets

http://whitey.net/Tu...HagiaSophia.jpg

There is an old saying. “When the dog anticipates its demise, it will soil at the gate of the mosque” i.e. It is a “death sentence“.
The hottest news of the day- Some are planning to build an sky scraping mosque adjacent the site of the 9/11 genocide/islamocide.
And the non-Christian, non-Church going mayor or New York is defending their rights? Next, some will take down St. Patrick's Cathedral and comvert it.
OK! Let’s hear it!!
Mosques in New York, New Jersey and New Yerevan/ Glendale?
How many churches are there in mecca?
SHUNSHANORDINER!
Why don’t they go back to mecca and build a few CHRISTIAN CHURCHES?
ՇԱՆ ՕՐԸ ՈՐ ՀԱՍՆԷ, ՄԶԿԻԹԻ ԴՌԱՆ ՔԱՔՆԷ.
Let’s reverse this- ՇԱՆ ՕՐՆ ՈՐ ՀԱՍՆԷ ԵԿԵՂԵՑՈՒ ԴՌԱՆ ՔԱՔՆԷ
SHUNSHANORDINER!! HOW MANY CHURCHES ARE THERE IN MECCA???
Why do we pretend to be so “tolerant” when those other dogs can’t even spell the word???
Note. The so called mayor of New York Michael Blumberg does not go to Church on Sunday. Does he go to the mosque on Friday or to the Synagogue on Saturday?
Where are the Catholics and the Protestants? How about the “Armenian Apostolics“? The “first” and the “best” “Christians”?
Are we still building an “stone upon another stone”, some call “church” to just counter the “diocese” or the “prelacy”
Who said “Armenians are the stupidest of them all”?
Building churches in Arabia, Syria, Lebanon, America, Australia, Arizona, and Artamazt forbid, in Alaska. How about we renovate churches in Aragats and Areni, before we build “churches“ in Addisababa, Arizona, and Arkansas?
No! It was not me!!
---

NYers wage jihad vs. WTC mosque
By TOM TOPOUSIS and JOE MOLLICA
Last Updated: 6:29 AM, May 26, 2010
Posted: 3:43 AM, May 26, 2010
Angry relatives of 9/11 victims last night clashed with supporters of a planned mosque near Ground Zero at a raucous community-board hearing in Manhattan.
After four hours of public debate, members of Community Board 1 finally voted 29-1 in support of the project. Nine members abstained, arguing that they wanted to table the issue and vote at a later date.
The board has no official say over whether the estimated $100 million mosque and community center gets built. But the panel's support, or lack of it, is considered important in influencing public opinion.
Holding up photos of loved ones killed in the Twin Towers and carrying signs such as, "Honor 3,000, 9/11 -- No mosque!" opponents of the proposed Cordoba House on Park Place called the plan an insult to the terror-attack victims.
"That is a burial ground," said retired FDNY Deputy Chief Al Santora, referring to the fact that victims' remains were scattered for blocks.
Santora's 23-year-old son, Christopher, was the youngest firefighter to die that day.
"I do have a problem with having a mosque on top of the site where [terrorists] can gloat about what they did," said Santora, with his wife, Maureen, by his side.
About 150 people attended the emotional Greenwich Street meeting, were some shouted down others as they took their turns.
Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf, the head of the Cordoba Institute, which is in charge of the project, insisted that the site would help "bridge the great divide" between Muslims and the rest of America.
"We are Americans, we are Muslim Americans," Rauf said. "Many of us were born in the United States. We have no higher aspirations than to bring up our children in peace and harmony in this country."
But the crowd got ugly when he added, "Freedom of assembly is the right of all Americans."
Amid boos, one woman shouted, "Not at the World Trade Center!"
Rauf's wife, Daisy Khan, followed him to the microphone to pitched the planned community facility as "much needed party space and much needed venue space" for the area.
She was roundly booed.
Some audience members preached tolerance for the Muslim leaders.
Before the meeting, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, a supporter of the mosque, stood in front of the site and said, "What we're rejecting here is outright bigotry and hatred."
Catholic priest Kevin Madigan, of St. Peter's Church, which is about a block away, agreed.
"I think they need to establish a place such as this for people of goodwill from mainline Christian, Jewish and Muslim faiths so we can come together to talk," Madigan said.
tom.topousis@nypost.com
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Edited by Arpa, 15 July 2010 - 02:22 PM.





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